An amateur fossil hunter diving off the Florida Keys discovered an amazingly well-preserved ancient Native American burial site.
The site could provide transformative information about how these early Floridians lived and how they reacted to the rise in sea level which followed the last ice age.
The site was discovered in 21 feet of water off Manasota Key in June 2016.
The Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research (BAR) used noninvasive techniques like including magnetometry, sub-bottom profiling, and side-scan sonar, to map and evaluate the site.
The investigation revealed the remains of multiple individuals.
The burial ground appears to have been at the bottom of a freshwater pond. A layer of peat helped preserve the remains and some of the wooden stakes used as grave markers.
Carbon dating of some wooden stakes left in the site suggests the earliest bodies were interred in 7,200 years ago, during the so-called Archaic period. At that time the Gulf of Mexico was about 30 feet lower than it is today.
Protected and Preserved
Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner posted on his official website, “Out of respect for the individuals buried there and their living descendants, divers and other interested individuals are prohibited from disturbing the site.”The area will be patrolled by law enforcement to prevent relic-hunters and souvenir-seekers from disturbing the area.
The site has already been protected from development, erosion, and storm damage, the forces which often tend to destroy archeological sites in Florida. Because this site was submerged for thousands of years, it has been protected from the elements. At the same time peat acts as a natural preservative for organic matter.
Preserved offshore burial sites are extremely rare, with Israel and Denmark housing some of the only ones so far discovered.
By studying the site, archeologists hope to learn how Archaic Americans lived, and how the rise in sea level which followed the last ice age affected the landscape and its inhabitants.
Respecting This Important Ancestral Site
BAR has mapped the area comprehensively and has taken soil and sediment samples. Through analysis BAR scientists hope to be able to understand the environment prevailing in the Florida Keys seven millennia ago.Florida’s Department of Historical Resources is formulating a plan for the further investigation of the site working closely with the Seminole Tribe of Florida’s Office of Historic Preservation.